I was first introduced to this book in the year 2000, my first year in youth ministry. Taking on a new new ministry job, working through my undergrad at WMU and being newly married forced me to take personal management seriously and Franklin Covey's "What Matters Most" seminar was recommended to me by my pastor. I was thrilled by the course, initially by the free organizer, but secondly and mostly by the vision of a highly organized, not-stressed, principle-driven me that our presenter made sound totally achievable. It was an ideal I would drag with me through the next eight eventful years of my life.
Each job change (there were three in these past eight years) brought another opportunity to identify my core values, define my existence and articulate a personal mission statement. My commitment to those statements ebbed and flowed, but even at my weakest, most scattered moments, I knew I should be putting "first things first", and "working in Quadrant II", and "going for Win/Win". At times, it was just a calendaring system, but in the back of my mind was the theme of spending my time, intentionally, on what matters most, that not only should I be doing things well but that I should be doing the right things.
As we knock on the door of 2009, I'm still at Miracle Camp but have also taken on the Executive Director role of Orphan Justice Mission. Once again, I'm revisiting my mission, working through who I am, what I do (and what I don't do), and how I want to do it. My responsibilities are broader and my schedule is tighter than ever before. I need to be more intentional, more efficient, more focused on the important things in order to succeed in my roles (and avoid a nasty case of burnout). The timing couldn't have been better for my chance to teach the interns, because the act of teaching is one of the best opportunities to learn (or recommit). I've reread the book, I've rewritten my mission statement, and I'm feeling stronger than ever in my calling, in my purpose, and my ability to execute it.
It's just another ride around the circle of internalization, a further solidification of a system of self-management and maturity. I pray that it's something that God uses both in my life and the interns' lives to shape us into the people He desires us to be.